PREFACE
Timothy, or Timotheus, was a
native of Lystra, in the Lesser
Asia. His father was a Greek,
but his grandmother Lois, and
his mother Eunice, were pious
Jewish women, and trained him up
from a child in the knowledge of
the Scriptures. When young, and
probably by hearing the gospel
preached by Paul or Barnabas, he
was converted to the Christian
faith: and from the time of his
conversion made such proficiency
in the knowledge of the gospel,
and was so remarkable for his
piety and zeal in the cause of
Christ, that he attracted the
esteem of all the brethren in
those parts, and was so well
spoken of by them, that Paul
would have him to accompany him
in his journeys through the
Gentile countries, and to assist
him in his labours of preaching
the gospel. And as Timothy,
though a Jew, had not been
circumcised, by reason that his
father was a Gentile, the
apostle thought it proper that
he should bear that mark of his
descent from a Jewess, because
without it the Jews would have
looked on him as a heathen, and
would have despised his
instructions. This, and not any
opinion that circumcision was
necessary to salvation, caused
the apostle to propose and
Timothy to receive that rite, by
which the Jews, from the
earliest times, had been
distinguished from the rest of
mankind. Afterward the
presbyters at Lystra, the more
strongly to impress Timothy with
a sense of the importance of the
work he had undertaken, solemnly
set him apart to the office of
an evangelist, by the laying on
of their hands and by prayer.
This was followed by the laying
on of the apostle’s hands, for
the purpose of communicating to
Timothy the gifts of the Holy
Ghost, 2 Timothy 1:6.
Timothy being thus prepared to
be the apostle’s fellow-labourer
in the gospel, accompanied him
and Silas when they visited the
churches of Phrygia, and
delivered to them the decrees of
the apostles and elders at
Jerusalem, declaring it
unnecessary for the believing
Gentiles to be circumcised, and
to observe the ceremonial law of
Moses. Having gone through these
countries, and at length come to
Troas, where Luke joined them,
they were directed by a vision
to go into Macedonia. Loosing,
therefore, from Troas, they all
passed over to Neapolis, and
from thence went to Philippi,
where they were instrumental in
converting many, and in planting
a Christian church. Leaving Luke
at Philippi, they proceeded from
thence to Thessalonica, where
also they made many converts;
but, being opposed with great
violence by the unbelieving
Jews, they were obliged to flee
to Berea, whither the Jews from
Thessalonica followed them. To
elude their rage, Paul, who was
most obnoxious to them, departed
from Berea by night to go to
Athens, leaving Silas and
Timothy in Berea. While the
apostle remained at Athens,
Timothy came to him, and gave
him such an account of the
afflicted state of the
Thessalonian brethren, as
induced him to send that
evangelist back to comfort them.
The apostle, meeting with little
success at Athens, did not think
it proper to continue there many
days, but leaving that city,
went forward to Corinth, where
Silas and Timothy came to him,
and assisted him in the work of
preaching the gospel to the
Corinthians. And when he left
Corinth, they accompanied him
first to Ephesus, then to
Jerusalem, and after that to
Antioch in Syria. Having spent
some time in Antioch, Paul set
out with Timothy on his third
apostolical journey; in which,
after visiting all the churches
of Galatia and Phrygia, in the
order in which they had been
planted, they came to Ephesus
the second time, and there abode
long. In short, from the time
Timothy first joined the apostle
as his assistant, he never left
him, except when sent by him on
some special errand. And by his
affection, fidelity, and zeal,
he so recommended himself to all
the disciples, and acquired such
authority among them, that Paul
inserted his name in the
inscription of several of the
letters which he wrote to the
churches, to show that their
doctrine was one and the same.
Timothy, it must be observed,
was properly, as was Titus also,
an itinerant evangelist; a kind
of secondary apostle, whose
office was to regulate all
things in the churches to which
he was sent, and to inspect and
reform whatsoever was amiss
either in the bishops, deacons,
or people. St. Paul had,
doubtless, largely instructed
him in private conversation for
the due execution of so weighty
an office. Yet, to fix things
more upon his mind, and to give
him an opportunity of having
recourse to them afterward, as
there might be occasion, and of
communicating them to others, as
also to leave divine directions
in writing, for the use of the
church and its ministers, in all
ages, he sent him this excellent
pastoral letter, which contains
a great variety of important
instructions and advices. With
respect to the date of this
epistle, learned men have been
greatly divided in their
opinions. The hypothesis which
has prevailed most generally is,
that it was written about A.D.
60, when Paul had lately quitted
Ephesus, on account of the
tumult raised there by
Demetrius, and was gone into
Macedonia, Acts 20:1. And this
has been the opinion of many
learned critics, ancient and
modern; particularly of
Athanasius, Theodoret, Baronius,
Ludovic, Capellus, Blondel,
Hammond, Grotius, Salmasius,
Lightfoot, and Benson. On the
other hand, Bishop Pearson
endeavours to prove, that it
could not be written till
between the time of the first
and second imprisonment of Paul
at Rome, about A.D. 68; which
opinion has been embraced by Le
Clerc, L’Enfant, Cave, Fabricius,
Mill, Whitby, Paley, Macknight,
and others. The following
arguments, however, in favour of
the former hypothesis, do not
appear to the author of this
work to have yet received a
satisfactory answer, and
therefore he prefers the ancient
opinion.
1. When Paul wrote his first
epistle to him, Timothy was a
young man, as appears from 1
Timothy 4:12, where the apostle
says, “Let no man despise thy
youth;” which is also referred
to 1 Corinthians 16:10-11. Now
supposing he were only sixteen
years of age when converted to
Christianity, which is thought
to have been in St. Paul’s
journey through the Lesser Asia,
recorded Acts 14., (see note on
Acts 16:1,) he would, in the
year 60, be about thirty years
of age; but in 68, when the
latter hypothesis supposes the
epistle was written, he would be
thirty-eight, and certainly past
the time of youth; thirty being
the age at which the Levites
were, according to the law, to
enter upon their office. 2. The
state of things in the church at
Ephesus, in A.D. 60, better
suits the contents of the first
epistle than it does in A.D. 68.
For it appears from chap. 1
Timothy 1:3-7, and other
passages, that those corruptions
which the apostle speaks of as
greatly increased and risen to a
considerable height, when he met
the elders of Ephesus at
Miletus, and when he wrote his
second epistle, were but just
beginning to creep into the
church at the time of his
writing the first. To which it
may be added that, from the
particular instructions which
the apostle gives Timothy about
ordination, it seems as if the
church at Ephesus, and those in
the neighbourhood, had few or no
bishops at the time it was
written; from whence it appears
extremely probable that the
meeting between Paul and the
elders of Ephesus at Miletus,
must have been after the writing
of this epistle. But, 3. The
argument on which the principal
stress hath been laid, in favour
of the first hypothesis, is
taken from the solemn prophetic
declaration which Paul made when
he took his leave of the elders
of Ephesus at Miletus, in the
following words, “I know that ye
all, among whom I have gone
preaching the kingdom of God,
shall see my face no more,” Acts
20:25. From whence it is
inferred, that he must have
written this epistle to Timothy
before that interview, since in
it he not only expresses a full
expectation of returning, but
speaks of his having just left
Ephesus when he set out on his
journey for Macedonia.
The epistle contains three
parts: I. The inscription, 1
Timothy 1:1-2. II. The
instruction of Timothy how to
behave at Ephesus; wherein,
1. In general, he gives an
injunction to deliver to them
that taught the law in a wrong
manner, and confirms, at the
same time, the sum of the
gospel, as exemplified in
himself, 1 Timothy 1:3-20.
2. In particular, he prescribes
to men a method of prayer, 1
Timothy 2:1-8; to women, good
works and modesty, 1 Timothy
2:9-15. He recounts the
requisites of a bishop, 1
Timothy 3:1-7; the duties of
deacons, 1 Timothy 3:8-10; of
women, 1 Timothy 3:11-13.
3. He shows what Timothy should
teach, 1 Timothy 3:14; 1 Timothy
4:1-6; what he should avoid, 1
Timothy 4:7-11; what he should
follow after, 1 Timothy 4:12-16.
How he should treat men and
women, 1 Timothy 5:1-2; widows,
1 Timothy 5:3-16; elders, 1
Timothy 5:17-19; offenders, 1
Timothy 5:20-21; himself, 1
Timothy 5:22-23; those he doubts
of, 1 Timothy 5:24-25; servants,
1 Timothy 6:1; 1 Timothy 2:4.
False teachers are reproved, 1
Timothy 6:3-10; Timothy is
admonished and quickened, 1
Timothy 6:11-12; precepts are
prescribed to be enforced on the
rich, 1 Timothy 6:17-19. III.
The conclusion, 1 Timothy
6:20-21. |